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Royal Sussex Regiment

The Royal Sussex Regiment was a line infantry regiment of the British Army that was in existence from 1881 to 1966. The regiment was formed in 1881 as part of the Childers Reforms by the amalgamation of the 35th (Royal Sussex) Regiment of Foot and the 107th Regiment of Foot (Bengal Light Infantry). The regiment saw service in the Second Boer War, and both World War I and World War II.

Royal Sussex Regiment
Badge of the Royal Sussex Regiment.
Active1881–1966
Country United Kingdom
Branch British Army
TypeInfantry
RoleLine infantry
Size1–2 Regular battalions

1–2 Militia and Special Reserve battalions
1–3 Territorial and Volunteer battalions

Up to 17 Hostilities-only battalions
Garrison/HQRoussillon Barracks, Chichester
Nickname(s)The Prince of Orange's Own
The Orange Lilies
The Haddocks
The Iron Regiment
Motto(s)Honi soit qui mal y pense
(unofficial) Nothing succeeds like Sussex
MarchThe Royal Sussex
(unofficial) Sussex by the Sea
Anniversaries13 September – Quebec
30 June (1916) – The Day Sussex Died
EngagementsEgyptian Expedition
Second Boer War
World War I
World War II

On 31 December 1966, the Royal Sussex Regiment was amalgamated with the other regiments of the Home Counties Brigade – the Queen's Royal Surrey Regiment, the Queen's Own Buffs, The Royal Kent Regiment, and the Middlesex Regiment (Duke of Cambridge's Own) – to form the Queen's Regiment; which was later, on 9 September 1992, amalgamated with the Royal Hampshire Regiment to form the present Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment (Queen's and Royal Hampshires).

History edit

1881–1914 edit

The regiment was formed in 1881 as part of the Childers Reforms by the amalgamation of the 35th (Royal Sussex) Regiment of Foot and the 107th Regiment of Foot (Bengal Light Infantry),[1] together with the Royal Sussex Light Infantry Militia and the Cinque Ports and Sussex units of the Volunteer Force.[2] The 1st Battalion was sent to Egypt as part of General Garnet Wolseley's expedition to crush the ‘Urabi Revolt and conquer Egypt in the name of the Khedive. The 1st battalion was also part of the Nile Expedition, an unsuccessful attempt to save General Charles Gordon and his garrison at Khartoum during the Mahdist War. Twenty men of the regiment, led by Lieutenant Lionel Trafford, constituted the advanced party which marched towards Khartoum.[3] The battalion took part in the Battle of Abu Klea in January 1885 when Muhammad Ahmad was defeated.[4] After a couple of years back in England, the battalion was stationed in Ireland from 1891 to 1896, then at Malta in 1899.[5]

The 2nd Battalion was stationed at Malta from 1882, then moved to India in 1885 and took part in the Hazara Expedition in 1888 and the North-West Frontier campaign 1897–1898.[4] The battalion stayed in India until late 1902, when it returned home after more than 20 years′ foreign service.[6][7]

 
Second Boer War Memorial in Brighton

When the Second Boer War required more troops to reinforce British forces in South Africa, the 1st Battalion was sent there in February 1900, and fought at the Battle of Doornkop in May 1900.[8] A memorial to the fallen of the Second Boer War, incorporating a sculpture by Charles Leonard Hartwell titled "The Bugler", is at Regency Square, Brighton. The Sergeant Bugler sounded the charge of The Royal Sussex that swept The Boers from their formidable position at Doornkop.[9] A smaller bronze casting of The Bugler is held by the National Army Museum.[10] A silver reduction copy is also held by The 2nd Battalion Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment Officers' Mess.[11]

The Royal Sussex Light Infantry Militia formed the 3rd Battalion.[2] It was embodied in December 1899 and embarked for South Africa to take part in the Second Boer War in March 1901.[5] Most of the officers and men returned home on the SS Dominion in August 1902, after the war had ended two months earlier.[12] The three Volunteer Battalions contributed to a service company that reinforced the 1st Battalion, and gained them the Battle honour.[13]

Following the end of the war in South Africa, the 1st battalion transferred to India, where they were stationed at Sitapur in Bengal Presidency.[14]

In 1908, the Volunteers and Militia were reorganised nationally, with the former becoming the Territorial Force (TF) and the latter the Special Reserve (SR);[2][15] the regiment now had one Reserve battalion and three Territorial battalions. These were the 3rd (Reserve) Battalion (SR), with the 4th Battalion (TF) at Park Street in Horsham (since demolished), the 5th (Cinque Ports) Battalion (TF) at Middle Street in Hastings (since demolished) and the 6th (Cyclist) Battalion (TF) at Montpelier Place in Brighton (since demolished)[2][16][13]

First World War edit

Regular Army edit

The 1st Battalion, which formed part of the 1st (Peshawar) Brigade in the 1st (Peshawar) Division, was one of the few infantry battalions that remained in India throughout the whole war, being stationed at Peshawar.[17] However, it served in the Third Anglo-Afghan War in 1919.[18]

 
Men of the 2nd Battalion, Royal Sussex Regiment marching past Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught, near Bruay, France, 1 July 1918

The 2nd Battalion landed in France as part of 2nd Brigade in the 1st Division in August 1914 and fought through the war on the Western Front.[17] It took part in the Battle of Mons in August 1914, the Battle of the Marne in September 1914, the Battle of the Aisne in September 1914 and the First Battle of Ypres in November 1914 as well as the Battle of Aubers Ridge in May 1915.[19] During the Battle of Loos in September 1915 Sergeant Harry Wells was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross, when the battalion took part in an attack.[20] The battalion took part in the Battle of the Somme in Autumn 1916, the British pursuit to the Hindenburg Line in Spring 1917, the Battle of Passchendaele in October 1917, the Battle of the Lys in April 1918 and the Second Battle of Arras in August 1918.[19]

Territorial Force edit

Before the war the 4th and 5th battalions were Army Troops attached to the Home Counties Division. However, the division went to India without them. The 1/4th Battalion joined 160th Brigade in 53rd (Welsh) Division and landed at Suvla Bay in August 1915. After the Gallipoli campaign it was evacuated to Egypt and later served in Palestine, where it saw action at the battles of Gaza and Jerusalem. It moved to France in May 1918 for service on the Western Front in 34th Division.[17] The 1/5th (Cinque Ports) Battalion landed in France as Army Troops in early 1915, seeing action from the Battle of Aubers Ridge with 1st Division in May 1915. It later joined 48th (South Midland) Division as divisional pioneers, seeing action at the Somme and Ypres[17][21] before moving to Italy in November 1917.[17] The 1/6th (Cyclist) Battalion remained on coast defence duties in England and Ireland for the whole war, but the 2/6th was converted to infantry and saw action with 16th Indian Division in Waziristan in 1917–19.[17][22]

New Armies edit

The 7th (Service) Battalion was formed in September 1914 by men volunteering for Lord Kitchener's New Armies and landed at Boulogne-sur-Mer as part of the 36th Brigade in the 12th (Eastern) Division in June 1915 for service on the Western Front.[17] The 8th (Service) Battalion (Pioneers) landed at Boulogne-sur-Mer as part of the 54th Brigade in the 18th (Eastern) Division in July 1915 also for service on the Western Front.[17] The 9th (Service) Battalion landed at Boulogne-sur-Mer as part of the 73rd Brigade in the 24th Division in September 1915 also for service on the Western Front.[17]

The 11th, 12th and 13th (Southdowns) Battalions were all raised in late 1914 as part of the 116th Brigade of the 39th Division. All three battalions landed at Le Havre, France in March 1916 for service on the Western Front.[17] All three battalions took part in the Battle of the Boar's Head in June 1916. After a bombardment of the German trenches the 12th and 13th Battalions went over the top (most for the first time) and, under heavy fire, attacked the enemy trenches, bombing and bayoneting their way in. The 11th Battalion supplied carrying parties. They succeeded in taking the German front line trench, holding it for some four hours, and even briefly took the second line trench for about half an hour, beating off repeated counterattacks, and only withdrew from the shortage of ammunition and mounting casualties.[23] In regimental history this is known as The Day Sussex Died.[24] Edmund Blunden, a second lieutenant in the 11th Battalion, wrote an excellent account of his experiences in his memoirs, Undertones of War (1928).[4]

After the war, St George's Chapel, in Chichester Cathedral, was restored and furnished as a memorial to the fallen of the Royal Sussex Regiment. It now has all their names recorded on the panels that are attached to the chapel walls.[25]

Victoria Crosses during World War I edit

Second World War edit

Regular Army edit

The 1st Battalion was based in Egypt at the outbreak of the Second World War, having been sent to Palestine in 1938. The battalion was initially part of the 23rd Infantry Brigade. In October 1940, the battalion was transferred to the 7th Indian Infantry Brigade in the 4th Indian Infantry Division, with whom it remained for the rest of the war.[26] The battalion, briefly commanded by Geoffrey Charles Evans,[27] took part in the Western Desert campaign and the Italian Campaign, where it had a terrible time and was involved in the bloody Battle of Monte Cassino.[4] In late 1944 the battalion was shipped across to Greece with Lieutenant-General Ronald Scobie and his III Corps, remaining there until 1946 to help calm the Greek Civil War after the German withdrawal.[28]

The 2nd Battalion was a Regular Army unit that was based in Northern Ireland at the outbreak of war. The battalion, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Manley James, were joined with the 4th and 5th Battalions of the regiment in the 133rd (Royal Sussex) Infantry Brigade as part of the 44th (Home Counties) Infantry Division.[29] The 4th Royal Sussex Regiment was then commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Lashmer Whistler. The 2nd Battalion was sent to France in April 1940, to join the British Expeditionary Force (BEF), taking part in the Battle of France and the subsequent retreat to Dunkirk where they were evacuated to England in the Dunkirk evacuation.[4] The brigade was sent to North Africa in May 1942, where they fought in the Battle of Alam el Halfa in September 1942 and the Battle of El Alamein in October 1942.[4]

In 1943, the 2nd Battalion and volunteers from the 4th and 5th Royal Sussex were formed into the 10th Parachute Battalion of the Parachute Regiment, which was a part of the 4th Parachute Brigade, serving with the 1st Airborne Division. The brigade participated in Operation Slapstick, an amphibious landing on the Italian port of Taranto, as part of the Allied invasion of Italy. Then returning to England, the battalion then fought at Arnhem during the disastrous Operation Market Garden in September 1944 with the rest of the 1st Airborne Division.[4] Captain Lionel Queripel, from the Royal Sussex was awarded the Victoria Cross posthumously, during the Battle of Arnhem.[30] The 10th Parachute Battalion was disbanded in November 1945.[31]

The 2nd Battalion was reraised, after the old one became the 10th Para, and joined the 4th and 5th Battalions in 133rd Brigade of 44th (Home Counties) Division. They were sent to Egypt and fought at the battles of Alam el Hamza and Alamein. Afterwards the brigade was sent to the forgotten theatre of war in Iraq and Persia in 1943 with the 6th Indian Infantry Division where they remained for the rest of the war, the 2nd Battalion joining the 24th Indian Infantry Brigade, and the merged 4th/5th Battalion joining the 27th Indian Infantry Brigade.[32]

Territorial Army edit

The regiment also raised the 6th and 7th battalions (both 2nd Line Territorial Army duplicates of the 4th and 5th Battalions) which were both in the 37th (Royal Sussex) Infantry Brigade, part of the 12th (Eastern) Infantry Division.[33] They also served in France with the BEF in 1940 but suffered heavy casualties during the fighting and were evacuated from Dunkirk. The 12th Division was disbanded in July 1940 due to the heavy number of casualties suffered. The main reason for such heavy casualties was because most of the men had had very little training and few had even fired a rifle. After the return to England, the 6th Battalion served as a home defence unit for the rest of the war and was disbanded after the war in 1946. The 7th Battalion defended Amiens against air raids and the German 1st Panzer Division, which captured the town on 20 May. The battalion was transferred to the Royal Artillery and converted into the 109th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery.[34]

Hostilities-only edit

The 8th (Home Defence) Battalion was raised in 1939, presumably from the National Defence Companies. The battalion was mainly composed of older and less fit men and remained in the United Kingdom throughout the war. The battalion was redesignated as the 30th Battalion in 1941 and it was disbanded in 1943.[16]

 
An infantry section from the Royal Sussex Regiment stage a river crossing in a collapsible boat, Chichester, 25 March 1941.
 
1930s regimental drum.

The 9th Battalion, Royal Sussex Regiment was created in July 1940. It was originally commanded by 41-year-old Lieutenant Colonel Gerald Templer.[35] The battalion formed part of the 212th Independent Infantry Brigade (Home).[36] In October 1942, the battalion was converted to armour as the 160th Regiment Royal Armoured Corps and joined the 267th Indian Armoured Brigade, which included other infantry units converted to armour.[37] As with all infantry units converted in this way, they would still have worn their infantry capbadge on the black beret of the RAC.[38] However, it returned to the infantry role in April 1943[16] and was sent with the 72nd Infantry Brigade to fight in the Burma Campaign with the British 36th Infantry Division, previously 36th Indian.[39] The battalion saw action in the Arakan, was airlifted into Myitkyina and fought its way to Mandalay by April 1945.[40]

 
Private Putterill of the 9th Battalion, Royal Sussex Regiment armed with a Bren gun during a patrol, 22 November 1944.

The 10th Battalion was another hostilities-only battalion also raised in 1940 and joined the 219th Independent Infantry Brigade (Home), later the 203rd Brigade.[41]

 
General Von Arnim's Staff Car at Eastbourne Redoubt.

Post 1945 edit

 
The Eastbourne Redoubt South Seaward facade

On 31 December 1966 the regiment was amalgamated with the Queen's Royal Surrey Regiment, the Queen's Own Buffs, The Royal Kent Regiment and the Middlesex Regiment to form the Queen's Regiment.[42]

Regimental museum edit

The Royal Sussex Regiment Museum and that of the Queen's Royal Irish Hussars is based at Eastbourne Redoubt in Sussex.[43]

Battle honours edit

The regiment's battle honours were as follows:[16]

  • From 35th Regiment of Foot: Maida.
  • Gibraltar 1704–05, Louisburg, Quebec 1759, Martinique 1762, Havannah, St Lucia 1778, Egypt 1882, Abu Klea, Nile 1884–85, South Africa 1900–02.
  • The Great War (23 battalions): Mons, Retreat from Mons, Marne 1914 '18, Aisne 1914, Ypres 1914 '17 '18, Gheluvelt, Nonne Bosschen, Givenchy 1914, Aubers, Loos, Somme 1916 '18, Albert 1916 '18, Bazentin, Delville Wood, Pozières, Flers-Courcelette, Morval, Thiepval, Le Transloy, Ancre Heights, Ancre 1916 '18, Arras 1917 '18, Vimy 1917, Scarpe 1917, Arleux, Messines 1917, Pilckem, Langemarck 1917, Menin Road, Polygon Wood, Broodseinde, Poelcappelle, Passchendaele, Cambrai 1917 '18, St Quentin, Bapaume 1918, Rosières, Avre, Lys, Kemmel, Scherpenberg, Soissonais-Ourcq, Amiens, Drocourt-Quéant, Hindenburg Line, Épéhy, St Quentin Canal, Beaurevoir, Courtrai, Selle, Sambre, France and Flanders 1914–18, Piave, Vittorio Veneto, Italy 1917–18, Suvla, Landing at Suvla, Scimitar Hill, Gallipoli 1915, Rumani, Egypt 1915–17, Gaza, El Mughar, Jerusalem, Jericho, Tell 'Asur, Palestine 1917–18, N.W. Frontier India 1915 1916–17, Murman 1918–19.
  • Afghanistan 1919.
  • The Second World War: Defence of Escaut, Amiens 1940, St Omer-La Bassée, Forêt de Nieppe, North-West Europe 1940, Karora-Marsa Taclai, Cub Cub, Mescelit Pass, Keren, Mt Engiahat, Massawa, Abyssinia 1941, Omars, Benghazi, Alam el Halfa, El Alamein, Akarit, Djebel el Meida, Tunis, North Africa 1940–43, Cassino I, Monastery Hill, Gothic Line, Pian di Castello, Monte Reggiano, Italy 1944–45, North Arakan, Pinwe, Shweli, Burma 1943–45.

Colonel-in-Chief edit

The colonel-in-chief was as follows:[16]

Regimental Colonels edit

The regimental colonels were as follows:[16]

  • 1881 (1st Bn): Gen. Henry Renny, CSI
  • 1881–1883: (2nd Bn): Gen. Hon. Arthur Upton
  • 188n–1885: (1st Bn): Gen. Sir Richard Thomas Farren, GCB
  • 1885–1888: Lt-Gen. William Lenox Ingall, CB
  • 1888–1895: Lt-Gen. Robert Julian Baumgartner, CB
  • 1895–1898: Lt-Gen. John McNeill Walter, CB
  • 1898–1900: Lt-Gen. Sir George Samuel Young, KCB
  • 1900–1901: Gen. Sir John Davis, KCB
  • 1901–1903: Lt-Gen. Sir Henry Francis Williams, KCB
  • 1903–1914: Lt-Gen. Sir William Freeman Kelly, KCB
  • 1914–1926: Maj-Gen. James Charles Young, CB
  • 1926–1941: Brig-Gen. William Lushington Osborn, CB, CMG, DSO
  • 1941–1942: Brig. Richard Maule Birkett, DSO
  • 1942–1953: Brig. Thomas Francis Vere Foster, CBE, MC
  • 1953–1963: Gen. Sir Lashmer Gordon Whistler, GCB, KBE, DSO
  • 1963–1966: Brig. John Blackwood Ashworth, CBE, DSO

Honorary Colonel edit

  • 1941–1965: Col. Sir Winston Churchill, KG, OM, PC, CH, TD, DL, FRS, RA
    • (Honorary Colonel of the 4th/5th (Cinque Ports) Battalion, The Royal Sussex Regiment)

Cultural references edit

In the film Atonement (2007), Robbie Turner's unit during the Battle of France is identified as the 1st Battalion, Royal Sussex Regiment: in fact, the 1st Battalion never served in France.[44]

From 1942 to 1946 Peter Ustinov served as a private soldier with the Royal Sussex Regiment. He was batman for David Niven and the two became lifelong friends. Ustinov spent most of his service working with the Army Cinema Unit, where he was involved in making recruitment films, wrote plays and appeared in three films as an actor. At that time he co-wrote and acted in The Way Ahead (1944) (aka Immortal Battalion).[45][46]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "No. 24992". The London Gazette. 1 July 1881. pp. 3300–3301.
  2. ^ a b c d Frederick, pp. 209–212.
  3. ^ "Lionel James Trafford". Royal Sussex. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "Royal Sussex Regiment". National Army Museum. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  5. ^ a b Hart′s Army list, 1903
  6. ^ "Naval & military intelligence". The Times. No. 36929. London. 19 November 1902. p. 10.
  7. ^ . Regiments.org. Archived from the original on 23 November 2005. Retrieved 7 December 2018.
  8. ^ "Royal Sussex Regiment". Anglo-Boer War. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  9. ^ Brighton Herald 5 November 1904 p. 7 accessed 27 December 2020
  10. ^ "Statuette of a bugler of the Royal Sussex Regiment, Doornkop, South Africa, 1900 | Online Collection | National Army Museum, London". collection.nam.ac.uk.
  11. ^ Confirmation from Director PWRR & Queen's Regimental Museum 4 January 2021
  12. ^ "The Army in South Africa – Troops returning home". The Times. No. 36857. London. 27 August 1902. p. 6.
  13. ^ a b 'The Volunteers in Hastings' at Drill Hall Project.
  14. ^ "Naval & Military intelligence – The Army in India". The Times. No. 36896. London. 11 October 1902. p. 12.
  15. ^ "Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 31 March 1908. Retrieved 20 June 2017.
  16. ^ a b c d e f . Archived from the original on 4 January 2006. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Royal Sussex Regiment". The Long, Long Trail. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  18. ^ Robson, pp. 83–91.
  19. ^ a b "The 1st Division in 1914–1918". The Long, Long Trail. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  20. ^ "No. 29371". The London Gazette (Supplement). 16 November 1915. pp. 11448–11449.
  21. ^ "Royal Sussex Regiment" (PDF). West Sussex Council. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  22. ^ Robson, pp. 160–164.
  23. ^ Wiebkin 1923, p. 13
  24. ^ "The Day Sussex Died". East Sussex Council. 12 June 2014. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  25. ^ Atkinson, Pete; Poyner, Ruth (2007). Chichester Cathedral. Norwich: Jarold. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-7117-4478-3.
  26. ^ "4th Indian Infantry Division" (PDF). British Military History. Retrieved 24 January 2016.
  27. ^ Mead, p. 132
  28. ^ "Athens 1944: Britain's dirty secret". The Guardian. 30 November 2014. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  29. ^ Joslen, p. 319
  30. ^ "No. 36917". The London Gazette (Supplement). 20 March 1945. p. 669.
  31. ^ . Paradata. Archived from the original on 10 March 2009. Retrieved 12 March 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  32. ^ "27th Indian Infantry Brigade". Orders of Battle. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  33. ^ Joslen, p. 56
  34. ^ "109 (R Sussex Rgt) Light AA Regiment RA (TA)". Blue Yonder. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  35. ^ Heathcote, p. 274
  36. ^ Joslen, p. 375
  37. ^ Kempton 2003, p. 2
  38. ^ George Forty, "British Army Handbook 1939–1945", Stroud: Sutton Publishing, 1998, p. 51
  39. ^ "72nd Indian Infantry Brigade". Orders of Battle. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  40. ^ "Myitkyina to Mandalay a diary of the North Burma Campaign, 1944–45 'A' Company, 9th Battalion, the Royal Sussex Regiment". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  41. ^ Joslen, p. 366
  42. ^ "The Queen's Regiment 1966–1992". Queen's Royal Surreys. Retrieved 8 February 2020.
  43. ^ "Eastbourne Redoubt – Fortress and Museum". www.sussexmuseums.co.uk. Sussex Museums Group. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  44. ^ "Atonement (2007)". IMDB. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  45. ^ "Peter Ustinov". IMDB. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  46. ^ Symons, Mitchell (2007). This, That and the Other. Corgi. ISBN 978-0-552-15647-9.

Sources edit

  • Buckman, Richard (2001). The Royal Sussex Regiment: 1864–1920. Hailsham: J & KH. ISBN 1-900511-66-5.
  • Buckman, Richard (2004). The Royal Sussex Regiment: 1921–1966. Hailsham: J & KH. ISBN 1-900511-58-4.
  • J.B.M. Frederick, Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660–1978, Vol I, Wakefield: Microform Academic, 1984, ISBN 1-85117-007-3.
  • Fox, Sylvia, ed. (2013). Not Forgetting The 9th: The War Diaries of Sgt. Cyril Grimes 1944–1945. TimeBox Press. ISBN 978-0-9550219-1-6.
  • Gillings, Murray (1986). The Shiny 9th. Pinwe Club. ISBN 978-0-9511610-0-5.
  • Heathcote, Tony (1999). The British Field Marshals 1736–1997. Barnsley (UK): Pen & Sword. ISBN 0-85052-696-5.
  • Joslen, Lt-Col H. F. (2003) [1st pub. HMSO: 1960]. Orders of Battle, United Kingdom and Colonial Formations and Units in the Second World War, 1939–1945. Uckfield: Naval & Military. ISBN 1-84342-474-6.
  • Kempton, Chris (2003). "Loyalty & Honour", The Indian Army September 1939 – August 1947. Vol. Part III. Milton Keynes: The Military Press. ISBN 0-85420-248-X.
  • Martineau, G. D. (1955). A History of the Royal Sussex Regiment: a history of the Old Belfast regiment and the Regiment of Sussex, 1701–1953. Chichester: Moore & Tillyer.
  • Mead, Richard (2007). Churchill's Lions: A biographical guide to the key British generals of World War II. Stroud: Spellmount. ISBN 978-1-86227-431-0.
  • Brian Robson, Crisis on the Frontier: The Third Afghan War and the Campaign in Waziristan 1919–20, Staplehurst: Spellmount, 2004, ISBN 978-1-86227-211-8.
  • Wiebkin, H. W. (1923). A Short History of the 39th (Deptford) Divisional Artillery 1915–1918. London: E. G. Berryman. OCLC 697621967.

External links edit

  • Video: Back to Quebec (1959)
  • The Royal Sussex Living History Group Website – Source of much information on The Royal Sussex Regiment
  • Royal Sussex Society – US Living History
  • Badges of the Royal Sussex Regiment
  • Royal Sussex Southdowns (Historical Information about 11th, 12th, 13th and 14th Royal Sussex Battalions)
  • Royal Sussex Regiment Victoria Crosses
  • A Short History of The Royal Sussex Regiment from 1701 to 1926 by anon
  • The Drill Hall Project

royal, sussex, regiment, line, infantry, regiment, british, army, that, existence, from, 1881, 1966, regiment, formed, 1881, part, childers, reforms, amalgamation, 35th, royal, sussex, regiment, foot, 107th, regiment, foot, bengal, light, infantry, regiment, s. The Royal Sussex Regiment was a line infantry regiment of the British Army that was in existence from 1881 to 1966 The regiment was formed in 1881 as part of the Childers Reforms by the amalgamation of the 35th Royal Sussex Regiment of Foot and the 107th Regiment of Foot Bengal Light Infantry The regiment saw service in the Second Boer War and both World War I and World War II Royal Sussex RegimentBadge of the Royal Sussex Regiment Active1881 1966Country United KingdomBranch British ArmyTypeInfantryRoleLine infantrySize1 2 Regular battalions 1 2 Militia and Special Reserve battalions 1 3 Territorial and Volunteer battalions Up to 17 Hostilities only battalionsGarrison HQRoussillon Barracks ChichesterNickname s The Prince of Orange s OwnThe Orange LiliesThe HaddocksThe Iron RegimentMotto s Honi soit qui mal y pense unofficial Nothing succeeds like SussexMarchThe Royal Sussex unofficial Sussex by the SeaAnniversaries13 September Quebec30 June 1916 The Day Sussex DiedEngagementsEgyptian ExpeditionSecond Boer WarWorld War IWorld War II On 31 December 1966 the Royal Sussex Regiment was amalgamated with the other regiments of the Home Counties Brigade the Queen s Royal Surrey Regiment the Queen s Own Buffs The Royal Kent Regiment and the Middlesex Regiment Duke of Cambridge s Own to form the Queen s Regiment which was later on 9 September 1992 amalgamated with the Royal Hampshire Regiment to form the present Princess of Wales s Royal Regiment Queen s and Royal Hampshires Contents 1 History 1 1 1881 1914 1 2 First World War 1 2 1 Regular Army 1 2 2 Territorial Force 1 2 3 New Armies 1 2 4 Victoria Crosses during World War I 1 3 Second World War 1 3 1 Regular Army 1 3 2 Territorial Army 1 3 3 Hostilities only 1 4 Post 1945 2 Regimental museum 3 Battle honours 4 Colonel in Chief 5 Regimental Colonels 6 Honorary Colonel 7 Cultural references 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksHistory edit1881 1914 edit The regiment was formed in 1881 as part of the Childers Reforms by the amalgamation of the 35th Royal Sussex Regiment of Foot and the 107th Regiment of Foot Bengal Light Infantry 1 together with the Royal Sussex Light Infantry Militia and the Cinque Ports and Sussex units of the Volunteer Force 2 The 1st Battalion was sent to Egypt as part of General Garnet Wolseley s expedition to crush the Urabi Revolt and conquer Egypt in the name of the Khedive The 1st battalion was also part of the Nile Expedition an unsuccessful attempt to save General Charles Gordon and his garrison at Khartoum during the Mahdist War Twenty men of the regiment led by Lieutenant Lionel Trafford constituted the advanced party which marched towards Khartoum 3 The battalion took part in the Battle of Abu Klea in January 1885 when Muhammad Ahmad was defeated 4 After a couple of years back in England the battalion was stationed in Ireland from 1891 to 1896 then at Malta in 1899 5 The 2nd Battalion was stationed at Malta from 1882 then moved to India in 1885 and took part in the Hazara Expedition in 1888 and the North West Frontier campaign 1897 1898 4 The battalion stayed in India until late 1902 when it returned home after more than 20 years foreign service 6 7 nbsp Second Boer War Memorial in Brighton When the Second Boer War required more troops to reinforce British forces in South Africa the 1st Battalion was sent there in February 1900 and fought at the Battle of Doornkop in May 1900 8 A memorial to the fallen of the Second Boer War incorporating a sculpture by Charles Leonard Hartwell titled The Bugler is at Regency Square Brighton The Sergeant Bugler sounded the charge of The Royal Sussex that swept The Boers from their formidable position at Doornkop 9 A smaller bronze casting of The Bugler is held by the National Army Museum 10 A silver reduction copy is also held by The 2nd Battalion Princess of Wales s Royal Regiment Officers Mess 11 The Royal Sussex Light Infantry Militia formed the 3rd Battalion 2 It was embodied in December 1899 and embarked for South Africa to take part in the Second Boer War in March 1901 5 Most of the officers and men returned home on the SS Dominion in August 1902 after the war had ended two months earlier 12 The three Volunteer Battalions contributed to a service company that reinforced the 1st Battalion and gained them the Battle honour 13 Following the end of the war in South Africa the 1st battalion transferred to India where they were stationed at Sitapur in Bengal Presidency 14 In 1908 the Volunteers and Militia were reorganised nationally with the former becoming the Territorial Force TF and the latter the Special Reserve SR 2 15 the regiment now had one Reserve battalion and three Territorial battalions These were the 3rd Reserve Battalion SR with the 4th Battalion TF at Park Street in Horsham since demolished the 5th Cinque Ports Battalion TF at Middle Street in Hastings since demolished and the 6th Cyclist Battalion TF at Montpelier Place in Brighton since demolished 2 16 13 First World War edit Regular Army edit The 1st Battalion which formed part of the 1st Peshawar Brigade in the 1st Peshawar Division was one of the few infantry battalions that remained in India throughout the whole war being stationed at Peshawar 17 However it served in the Third Anglo Afghan War in 1919 18 nbsp Men of the 2nd Battalion Royal Sussex Regiment marching past Prince Arthur Duke of Connaught near Bruay France 1 July 1918 The 2nd Battalion landed in France as part of 2nd Brigade in the 1st Division in August 1914 and fought through the war on the Western Front 17 It took part in the Battle of Mons in August 1914 the Battle of the Marne in September 1914 the Battle of the Aisne in September 1914 and the First Battle of Ypres in November 1914 as well as the Battle of Aubers Ridge in May 1915 19 During the Battle of Loos in September 1915 Sergeant Harry Wells was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross when the battalion took part in an attack 20 The battalion took part in the Battle of the Somme in Autumn 1916 the British pursuit to the Hindenburg Line in Spring 1917 the Battle of Passchendaele in October 1917 the Battle of the Lys in April 1918 and the Second Battle of Arras in August 1918 19 Territorial Force edit Before the war the 4th and 5th battalions were Army Troops attached to the Home Counties Division However the division went to India without them The 1 4th Battalion joined 160th Brigade in 53rd Welsh Division and landed at Suvla Bay in August 1915 After the Gallipoli campaign it was evacuated to Egypt and later served in Palestine where it saw action at the battles of Gaza and Jerusalem It moved to France in May 1918 for service on the Western Front in 34th Division 17 The 1 5th Cinque Ports Battalion landed in France as Army Troops in early 1915 seeing action from the Battle of Aubers Ridge with 1st Division in May 1915 It later joined 48th South Midland Division as divisional pioneers seeing action at the Somme and Ypres 17 21 before moving to Italy in November 1917 17 The 1 6th Cyclist Battalion remained on coast defence duties in England and Ireland for the whole war but the 2 6th was converted to infantry and saw action with 16th Indian Division in Waziristan in 1917 19 17 22 New Armies edit The 7th Service Battalion was formed in September 1914 by men volunteering for Lord Kitchener s New Armies and landed at Boulogne sur Mer as part of the 36th Brigade in the 12th Eastern Division in June 1915 for service on the Western Front 17 The 8th Service Battalion Pioneers landed at Boulogne sur Mer as part of the 54th Brigade in the 18th Eastern Division in July 1915 also for service on the Western Front 17 The 9th Service Battalion landed at Boulogne sur Mer as part of the 73rd Brigade in the 24th Division in September 1915 also for service on the Western Front 17 The 11th 12th and 13th Southdowns Battalions were all raised in late 1914 as part of the 116th Brigade of the 39th Division All three battalions landed at Le Havre France in March 1916 for service on the Western Front 17 All three battalions took part in the Battle of the Boar s Head in June 1916 After a bombardment of the German trenches the 12th and 13th Battalions went over the top most for the first time and under heavy fire attacked the enemy trenches bombing and bayoneting their way in The 11th Battalion supplied carrying parties They succeeded in taking the German front line trench holding it for some four hours and even briefly took the second line trench for about half an hour beating off repeated counterattacks and only withdrew from the shortage of ammunition and mounting casualties 23 In regimental history this is known as The Day Sussex Died 24 Edmund Blunden a second lieutenant in the 11th Battalion wrote an excellent account of his experiences in his memoirs Undertones of War 1928 4 After the war St George s Chapel in Chichester Cathedral was restored and furnished as a memorial to the fallen of the Royal Sussex Regiment It now has all their names recorded on the panels that are attached to the chapel walls 25 Victoria Crosses during World War I edit Sgt Harry Wells posthumously for the Battle of Loos 1915 Lt Eric Archibald McNair Hooge in Belgium 1916 C S M Nelson Victor Carter posthumously for Richebourg l Avoue in France 1916 Lieut Col D G Johnson Crossing the Sambre Canal November 1918 Second World War edit Regular Army edit The 1st Battalion was based in Egypt at the outbreak of the Second World War having been sent to Palestine in 1938 The battalion was initially part of the 23rd Infantry Brigade In October 1940 the battalion was transferred to the 7th Indian Infantry Brigade in the 4th Indian Infantry Division with whom it remained for the rest of the war 26 The battalion briefly commanded by Geoffrey Charles Evans 27 took part in the Western Desert campaign and the Italian Campaign where it had a terrible time and was involved in the bloody Battle of Monte Cassino 4 In late 1944 the battalion was shipped across to Greece with Lieutenant General Ronald Scobie and his III Corps remaining there until 1946 to help calm the Greek Civil War after the German withdrawal 28 The 2nd Battalion was a Regular Army unit that was based in Northern Ireland at the outbreak of war The battalion under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Manley James were joined with the 4th and 5th Battalions of the regiment in the 133rd Royal Sussex Infantry Brigade as part of the 44th Home Counties Infantry Division 29 The 4th Royal Sussex Regiment was then commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Lashmer Whistler The 2nd Battalion was sent to France in April 1940 to join the British Expeditionary Force BEF taking part in the Battle of France and the subsequent retreat to Dunkirk where they were evacuated to England in the Dunkirk evacuation 4 The brigade was sent to North Africa in May 1942 where they fought in the Battle of Alam el Halfa in September 1942 and the Battle of El Alamein in October 1942 4 In 1943 the 2nd Battalion and volunteers from the 4th and 5th Royal Sussex were formed into the 10th Parachute Battalion of the Parachute Regiment which was a part of the 4th Parachute Brigade serving with the 1st Airborne Division The brigade participated in Operation Slapstick an amphibious landing on the Italian port of Taranto as part of the Allied invasion of Italy Then returning to England the battalion then fought at Arnhem during the disastrous Operation Market Garden in September 1944 with the rest of the 1st Airborne Division 4 Captain Lionel Queripel from the Royal Sussex was awarded the Victoria Cross posthumously during the Battle of Arnhem 30 The 10th Parachute Battalion was disbanded in November 1945 31 The 2nd Battalion was reraised after the old one became the 10th Para and joined the 4th and 5th Battalions in 133rd Brigade of 44th Home Counties Division They were sent to Egypt and fought at the battles of Alam el Hamza and Alamein Afterwards the brigade was sent to the forgotten theatre of war in Iraq and Persia in 1943 with the 6th Indian Infantry Division where they remained for the rest of the war the 2nd Battalion joining the 24th Indian Infantry Brigade and the merged 4th 5th Battalion joining the 27th Indian Infantry Brigade 32 Territorial Army edit The regiment also raised the 6th and 7th battalions both 2nd Line Territorial Army duplicates of the 4th and 5th Battalions which were both in the 37th Royal Sussex Infantry Brigade part of the 12th Eastern Infantry Division 33 They also served in France with the BEF in 1940 but suffered heavy casualties during the fighting and were evacuated from Dunkirk The 12th Division was disbanded in July 1940 due to the heavy number of casualties suffered The main reason for such heavy casualties was because most of the men had had very little training and few had even fired a rifle After the return to England the 6th Battalion served as a home defence unit for the rest of the war and was disbanded after the war in 1946 The 7th Battalion defended Amiens against air raids and the German 1st Panzer Division which captured the town on 20 May The battalion was transferred to the Royal Artillery and converted into the 109th Light Anti Aircraft Regiment Royal Artillery 34 Hostilities only edit The 8th Home Defence Battalion was raised in 1939 presumably from the National Defence Companies The battalion was mainly composed of older and less fit men and remained in the United Kingdom throughout the war The battalion was redesignated as the 30th Battalion in 1941 and it was disbanded in 1943 16 nbsp An infantry section from the Royal Sussex Regiment stage a river crossing in a collapsible boat Chichester 25 March 1941 nbsp 1930s regimental drum The 9th Battalion Royal Sussex Regiment was created in July 1940 It was originally commanded by 41 year old Lieutenant Colonel Gerald Templer 35 The battalion formed part of the 212th Independent Infantry Brigade Home 36 In October 1942 the battalion was converted to armour as the 160th Regiment Royal Armoured Corps and joined the 267th Indian Armoured Brigade which included other infantry units converted to armour 37 As with all infantry units converted in this way they would still have worn their infantry capbadge on the black beret of the RAC 38 However it returned to the infantry role in April 1943 16 and was sent with the 72nd Infantry Brigade to fight in the Burma Campaign with the British 36th Infantry Division previously 36th Indian 39 The battalion saw action in the Arakan was airlifted into Myitkyina and fought its way to Mandalay by April 1945 40 nbsp Private Putterill of the 9th Battalion Royal Sussex Regiment armed with a Bren gun during a patrol 22 November 1944 The 10th Battalion was another hostilities only battalion also raised in 1940 and joined the 219th Independent Infantry Brigade Home later the 203rd Brigade 41 nbsp General Von Arnim s Staff Car at Eastbourne Redoubt Post 1945 edit nbsp The Eastbourne Redoubt South Seaward facadeOn 31 December 1966 the regiment was amalgamated with the Queen s Royal Surrey Regiment the Queen s Own Buffs The Royal Kent Regiment and the Middlesex Regiment to form the Queen s Regiment 42 Regimental museum editThe Royal Sussex Regiment Museum and that of the Queen s Royal Irish Hussars is based at Eastbourne Redoubt in Sussex 43 Battle honours editThe regiment s battle honours were as follows 16 From 35th Regiment of Foot Maida Gibraltar 1704 05 Louisburg Quebec 1759 Martinique 1762 Havannah St Lucia 1778 Egypt 1882 Abu Klea Nile 1884 85 South Africa 1900 02 The Great War 23 battalions Mons Retreat from Mons Marne 1914 18 Aisne 1914 Ypres 1914 17 18 Gheluvelt Nonne Bosschen Givenchy 1914 Aubers Loos Somme 1916 18 Albert 1916 18 Bazentin Delville Wood Pozieres Flers Courcelette Morval Thiepval Le Transloy Ancre Heights Ancre 1916 18 Arras 1917 18 Vimy 1917 Scarpe 1917 Arleux Messines 1917 Pilckem Langemarck 1917 Menin Road Polygon Wood Broodseinde Poelcappelle Passchendaele Cambrai 1917 18 St Quentin Bapaume 1918 Rosieres Avre Lys Kemmel Scherpenberg Soissonais Ourcq Amiens Drocourt Queant Hindenburg Line Epehy St Quentin Canal Beaurevoir Courtrai Selle Sambre France and Flanders 1914 18 Piave Vittorio Veneto Italy 1917 18 Suvla Landing at Suvla Scimitar Hill Gallipoli 1915 Rumani Egypt 1915 17 Gaza El Mughar Jerusalem Jericho Tell Asur Palestine 1917 18 N W Frontier India 1915 1916 17 Murman 1918 19 Afghanistan 1919 The Second World War Defence of Escaut Amiens 1940 St Omer La Bassee Foret de Nieppe North West Europe 1940 Karora Marsa Taclai Cub Cub Mescelit Pass Keren Mt Engiahat Massawa Abyssinia 1941 Omars Benghazi Alam el Halfa El Alamein Akarit Djebel el Meida Tunis North Africa 1940 43 Cassino I Monastery Hill Gothic Line Pian di Castello Monte Reggiano Italy 1944 45 North Arakan Pinwe Shweli Burma 1943 45 Colonel in Chief editThe colonel in chief was as follows 16 1953 HM Juliana Queen of the NetherlandsRegimental Colonels editThe regimental colonels were as follows 16 1881 1st Bn Gen Henry Renny CSI 1881 1883 2nd Bn Gen Hon Arthur Upton 188n 1885 1st Bn Gen Sir Richard Thomas Farren GCB 1885 1888 Lt Gen William Lenox Ingall CB 1888 1895 Lt Gen Robert Julian Baumgartner CB 1895 1898 Lt Gen John McNeill Walter CB 1898 1900 Lt Gen Sir George Samuel Young KCB 1900 1901 Gen Sir John Davis KCB 1901 1903 Lt Gen Sir Henry Francis Williams KCB 1903 1914 Lt Gen Sir William Freeman Kelly KCB 1914 1926 Maj Gen James Charles Young CB 1926 1941 Brig Gen William Lushington Osborn CB CMG DSO 1941 1942 Brig Richard Maule Birkett DSO 1942 1953 Brig Thomas Francis Vere Foster CBE MC 1953 1963 Gen Sir Lashmer Gordon Whistler GCB KBE DSO 1963 1966 Brig John Blackwood Ashworth CBE DSOHonorary Colonel edit1941 1965 Col Sir Winston Churchill KG OM PC CH TD DL FRS RA Honorary Colonel of the 4th 5th Cinque Ports Battalion The Royal Sussex Regiment Cultural references editIn the film Atonement 2007 Robbie Turner s unit during the Battle of France is identified as the 1st Battalion Royal Sussex Regiment in fact the 1st Battalion never served in France 44 From 1942 to 1946 Peter Ustinov served as a private soldier with the Royal Sussex Regiment He was batman for David Niven and the two became lifelong friends Ustinov spent most of his service working with the Army Cinema Unit where he was involved in making recruitment films wrote plays and appeared in three films as an actor At that time he co wrote and acted in The Way Ahead 1944 aka Immortal Battalion 45 46 See also editHistory of SussexReferences edit No 24992 The London Gazette 1 July 1881 pp 3300 3301 a b c d Frederick pp 209 212 Lionel James Trafford Royal Sussex Retrieved 28 February 2016 a b c d e f g Royal Sussex Regiment National Army Museum Retrieved 28 February 2016 a b Hart s Army list 1903 Naval amp military intelligence The Times No 36929 London 19 November 1902 p 10 Locations 2nd Battalion The Royal Sussex Regiment Regiments org Archived from the original on 23 November 2005 Retrieved 7 December 2018 Royal Sussex Regiment Anglo Boer War Retrieved 28 February 2016 Brighton Herald 5 November 1904 p 7 accessed 27 December 2020 Statuette of a bugler of the Royal Sussex Regiment Doornkop South Africa 1900 Online Collection National Army Museum London collection nam ac uk Confirmation from Director PWRR amp Queen s Regimental Museum 4 January 2021 The Army in South Africa Troops returning home The Times No 36857 London 27 August 1902 p 6 a b The Volunteers in Hastings at Drill Hall Project Naval amp Military intelligence The Army in India The Times No 36896 London 11 October 1902 p 12 Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907 Parliamentary Debates Hansard 31 March 1908 Retrieved 20 June 2017 a b c d e f The Royal Sussex Regiment UK Archived from the original on 4 January 2006 Retrieved 28 February 2016 a b c d e f g h i j Royal Sussex Regiment The Long Long Trail Retrieved 28 February 2016 Robson pp 83 91 a b The 1st Division in 1914 1918 The Long Long Trail Retrieved 28 February 2016 No 29371 The London Gazette Supplement 16 November 1915 pp 11448 11449 Royal Sussex Regiment PDF West Sussex Council Retrieved 28 February 2016 Robson pp 160 164 Wiebkin 1923 p 13 The Day Sussex Died East Sussex Council 12 June 2014 Retrieved 28 February 2016 Atkinson Pete Poyner Ruth 2007 Chichester Cathedral Norwich Jarold p 4 ISBN 978 0 7117 4478 3 4th Indian Infantry Division PDF British Military History Retrieved 24 January 2016 Mead p 132 Athens 1944 Britain s dirty secret The Guardian 30 November 2014 Retrieved 28 February 2016 Joslen p 319 No 36917 The London Gazette Supplement 20 March 1945 p 669 10th Battalion The Parachute Regiment Paradata Archived from the original on 10 March 2009 Retrieved 12 March 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 27th Indian Infantry Brigade Orders of Battle Retrieved 28 February 2016 Joslen p 56 109 R Sussex Rgt Light AA Regiment RA TA Blue Yonder Retrieved 28 February 2016 Heathcote p 274 Joslen p 375 Kempton 2003 p 2 George Forty British Army Handbook 1939 1945 Stroud Sutton Publishing 1998 p 51 72nd Indian Infantry Brigade Orders of Battle Retrieved 28 February 2016 Myitkyina to Mandalay a diary of the North Burma Campaign 1944 45 A Company 9th Battalion the Royal Sussex Regiment Imperial War Museum Retrieved 28 February 2016 Joslen p 366 The Queen s Regiment 1966 1992 Queen s Royal Surreys Retrieved 8 February 2020 Eastbourne Redoubt Fortress and Museum www sussexmuseums co uk Sussex Museums Group Retrieved 20 January 2018 Atonement 2007 IMDB Retrieved 28 February 2016 Peter Ustinov IMDB Retrieved 1 June 2020 Symons Mitchell 2007 This That and the Other Corgi ISBN 978 0 552 15647 9 Sources editBuckman Richard 2001 The Royal Sussex Regiment 1864 1920 Hailsham J amp KH ISBN 1 900511 66 5 Buckman Richard 2004 The Royal Sussex Regiment 1921 1966 Hailsham J amp KH ISBN 1 900511 58 4 J B M Frederick Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660 1978 Vol I Wakefield Microform Academic 1984 ISBN 1 85117 007 3 Fox Sylvia ed 2013 Not Forgetting The 9th The War Diaries of Sgt Cyril Grimes 1944 1945 TimeBox Press ISBN 978 0 9550219 1 6 Gillings Murray 1986 The Shiny 9th Pinwe Club ISBN 978 0 9511610 0 5 Heathcote Tony 1999 The British Field Marshals 1736 1997 Barnsley UK Pen amp Sword ISBN 0 85052 696 5 Joslen Lt Col H F 2003 1st pub HMSO 1960 Orders of Battle United Kingdom and Colonial Formations and Units in the Second World War 1939 1945 Uckfield Naval amp Military ISBN 1 84342 474 6 Kempton Chris 2003 Loyalty amp Honour The Indian Army September 1939 August 1947 Vol Part III Milton Keynes The Military Press ISBN 0 85420 248 X Martineau G D 1955 A History of the Royal Sussex Regiment a history of the Old Belfast regiment and the Regiment of Sussex 1701 1953 Chichester Moore amp Tillyer Mead Richard 2007 Churchill s Lions A biographical guide to the key British generals of World War II Stroud Spellmount ISBN 978 1 86227 431 0 Brian Robson Crisis on the Frontier The Third Afghan War and the Campaign in Waziristan 1919 20 Staplehurst Spellmount 2004 ISBN 978 1 86227 211 8 Wiebkin H W 1923 A Short History of the 39th Deptford Divisional Artillery 1915 1918 London E G Berryman OCLC 697621967 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Royal Sussex Regiment Video Back to Quebec 1959 The Royal Sussex Regiment history The Royal Sussex Living History Group Website Source of much information on The Royal Sussex Regiment Royal Sussex Society US Living History Badges of the Royal Sussex Regiment British Regiments site Royal Sussex Southdowns Historical Information about 11th 12th 13th and 14th Royal Sussex Battalions Royal Sussex Regiment Victoria Crosses A Short History of The Royal Sussex Regiment from 1701 to 1926 by anon The Drill Hall Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Royal Sussex Regiment amp oldid 1192019130, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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